This appraiser in this case was getting paid $450 (invoice was attached to the appraisal and the appraiser's fee was disclosed in the addendum) to appraise what should have been an easy cookie cutter in a subdivision with 22 recent similar sales and a couple of other sales of similar properties in a nearby competing subdivision. The lender is a regional lender with its own AMC, but with that type of fee, the fee likely had nothing to do with selecting someone without a clue.
The lender may certainly share some of the blame, but this really should have been a very simple appraisal that did not require the services of a genius. Just about any appraiser who is not completely clueless could have done a decent job appraising this property. The low fee business model has nothing to do with this particular situation as a good fee was being paid on this one ($450 for a cookie cutter that was 95% complete at the time of the appraisal inspection) with an additional easy money inspection fee when the few uncompleted items are complete and a final inspection is ordered.Does all the heat come down on the appraiser for being an idiot, or for the client lack of due diligence for choosing them?
I believe the low fee business model leads to this kind of selection.
I pended the file with some stips even though I believe that the contract price is supported....I am using this as an opportunity to try to educate this guy. Since we are only the insurer and not the loan originator, I do not not have direct contact with the appraiser and cannot called him to have a discussion, which is what I would do if I were the chief appraiser at the lender.Now, what are you going to do about it is the million dollar question?
I pended the file with some stips even though I believe that the contract price is supported....I am using this as an opportunity to try to educate this guy. Since we are only the insurer and not the loan originator, I do not not have direct contact with the appraiser and cannot called him to have a discussion, which is what I would do if I were the chief appraiser at the lender.
I am not going to turn this guy into the state board if that is what you are asking. I will not turn in someone for making a mistake that does not involve dishonesty or a likely inflated value without first giving him or her a chance to correct that mistake. In this case, the 22 sales in the subdivision that this guy did not use most likely would have supported the appraised had any of them been included in the appraisal.
We don't recommend to lenders what appraisers to use or not to use as that opens up a whole bunch of legal issues that we don't want to deal with. However, what we will do on egregious appraisals is have a conversation with the lender about the issues of concern and most lenders are smart enough to figure out that they ought to have a discussion with that particular appraiser or add him or her to their watch list/exclusionary list.(especially when we have a discussion about multiple appraisals that just happen to be from one appraiser).So recoment the lender not use the appraiser, how do they stay in business year after year ...